Search engines are now part of our daily life, whether it’s doing analysis for Xmas gifts or where the closest coffee shop is open before 7 a.m. or looking for the best steak house in town. People are now getting more and more focused on search engines to get their regular queries answered.  Many of our returned questions are linked to what we’re doing and others are just bizarre. The services that we are involved in are relevant to what we do, such as optimizing search results, web design, web growth, and many more. Since we use “all routes to the store,” we are also heavily dependent on our bread & butter traffic search engines.

Google

Google Search Engine is the world’s fastest search engine and it’s probably one of Google’s most famous items. Google has gained nearly 70 per cent of the search engine market. The software giant is constantly developing and looking to refine the algorithm of the search engine and give the end-user the best performance. While the largest search engine continues to be Google, YouTube is now more popular than Google (on desktop computers) as of 2015.

Bing 

Bing is the response to Google from Microsoft and it was released in 2009. In Microsoft’s web browser, Bing is the main search engine. They still try to make Bing a great search engine, but it has a long way to go to compete with Google. Microsoft’s search engine, along with maps, offers numerous features, including image, site, and video search. This is a perfect forum for companies to upload their information to improve their search results. Bing launched Places (Google’s counterpart is Google My Business).

Yahoo

Yahoo & Bing are struggling with each other rather than with Google. Yahoo has a market share of 7.68 per cent, according to a new survey on netmarketshare.com. While a pioneer as a free email service, with their latest acknowledgement, that User Information & Passwords were compromised last year, this is deteriorating dramatically.

Baidu 

Baidu is China’s most-used search engine and was founded in January 2000 by Eric Xu, a Chinese entrepreneur. This web search is intended to provide results for photos, audio files, and websites. Some other resources, including maps, news, cloud storage, and many more, are offered.

AOL

Aol.com ranks in the top search engines as well. These are the ones who used to give out CD’s that you can load to update their browser and modem applications on your PC. They currently have a 0.59 per cent market share, previously the pre-eminent player. Verizon Communication, for $4.4 billion, acquired AOL. It was started as Control Video Company back in 1983. It was named America Online in 1991 and AOL Inc. in 2009. AOL is a New York-based multinational mass media corporation. Advertising services such as AOL Advertising, AOL Mail, and AOL Portal are also offered by the agency.

Ask.com

Ask.com, formerly known as Ask Jeeves, was founded in 1995. Their main idea was to provide search results based on a basic web format of query + response. In order to answer your question, it is a question & answer community where you can get the answers to your question and it incorporates a vast volume of archive info. The findings would not be as recent as those of Google, Bing, and Yahoo because of this focus on archived and active user contributions. They have sought to counter where their tools may not have the response from a third-party search engine where they get support. Curiously, they don’t name who it is.

Excite

Excite is not generally accepted, but it is also one that breaks into the top 10. Excite is an online web hub offering email, search engine, news, instant messaging and weather alerts for internet services. It also brings us new developments, subjects, etc.

DuckDuckGo

DuckDuckGo is a popular search engine known for safeguarding users ‘ privacy. They’re very transparent on who they use to deliver search results, unlike Ask.com; they’ve collaborated with Yahoo, Bing, and Yummly. It was created in California in 2008 by Gabriel Weinberg and its income comes from the network and members of the Yahoo-Bing search alliance.

Wolfram Alpha

Wolfram Alpha is a search engine for programming information that does not include search results for a list of papers or web sites. Results are focused on the truth & details about the query. Their mission statement is to make all computable and broadly available systemic information. Launched in 2009, they now have a Pro solution tailored for students and educators with pricing. It’s an amazing platform for the right market, just as it is aimed.

Yandex

Launched in 1997, Yandex is Russia’s most-used search engine. Yandex also has a strong presence in Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Turkey. It offers services like Yandex Maps, Yandex Music, Yandex Money, online translator, and many other services.